Abstract

Mitigating crop and livestock loss to wildlife and improving compensation distribution are important for conservation efforts in landscapes where people and wildlife co-occur outside protected areas. The lack of rigorously collected spatial data poses a challenge to management efforts to minimize loss and mitigate conflicts. We surveyed 735 households from 347 villages in a 5154 km2 area surrounding Kanha Tiger Reserve in India. We modeled self-reported household crop and livestock loss as a function of agricultural, demographic and environmental factors, and mitigation measures. We also modeled self-reported compensation received by households as a function of demographic factors, conflict type, reporting to authorities, and wildlife species involved. Seventy-three percent of households reported crop loss and 33% livestock loss in the previous year, but less than 8% reported human injury or death. Crop loss was associated with greater number of cropping months per year and proximity to the park. Livestock loss was associated with grazing animals inside the park and proximity to the park. Among mitigation measures only use of protective physical structures were associated with reduced livestock loss. Compensation distribution was more likely for tiger related incidents, and households reporting loss and located in the buffer. Average estimated probability of crop loss was 0.93 and livestock loss was 0.60 for surveyed households. Estimated crop and livestock loss and compensation distribution were higher for households located inside the buffer. Our approach modeled conflict data to aid managers in identifying potential conflict hotspots, influential factors, and spatially maps risk probability of crop and livestock loss. This approach could help focus allocation of conservation efforts and funds directed at conflict prevention and mitigation where high densities of people and wildlife co-occur.

Highlights

  • Reducing conflict between wildlife and people is considered a top conservation priority, in landscapes where high densities of people and wildlife co-occur [1,2]

  • We modeled reported compensation received by households as a function of individual respondents factors, household characteristics, conflict type, reporting effort by households to authorities, wildlife species, proximity to the protected areas (PAs) and location inside administrative buffer

  • Our results identified and quantified main factors associated with self-reported household crop raiding and livestock predation losses, as well as compensation distribution (Figures 3, 4, and 5), in 5145 km2 area surrounding Kanha

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Summary

Introduction

Reducing conflict between wildlife and people is considered a top conservation priority, in landscapes where high densities of people and wildlife co-occur [1,2]. Dearth of knowledge about conflict loss and compensation distribution contributes to poor allocation of conservation resources [4,5]. Failure to address emerging issues with conflict losses and distribution of compensation may lead to escalation of tensions between people and wildlife, and promote retaliatory actions leading to extirpations of species [6,7]. Preventing conflict and improving distribution of compensation are important to fostering co-existence in landscapes that surround protected areas and function as critical buffers for wildlife [8,9]. Indian protected areas (PAs) support a huge array of wildlife that are prone to conflict with people. Understanding the factors associated with conflict and where they are likely to occur is important for conservation management of conflicts [2,13]

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